Screening Youth for Suicide Risk - Children's Safety ... · 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 Suicide...
Transcript of Screening Youth for Suicide Risk - Children's Safety ... · 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 Suicide...
Screening Youth for Suicide Risk
July 30, 2019
Funding Sponsor
This project is supported by the Health Resources and Services
Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) under the Child and Adolescent Injury and
Violence Prevention Resource Centers Cooperative Agreement
(U49MC28422) for $5,000,000 with 0 percent financed with
non-governmental sources. This information or content and
conclusions are those of the author and should not be construed
as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements
be inferred by HRSA, HHS or the U.S. Government.
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Presenters
Bonnie Lipton, MPH
Moderator
Lisa Horowitz, PhD, MPH Jeff Bridge, PhD
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Lisa M. Horowitz, PhD, MPHOffice of the Clinical Director
Intramural Research Program
National Institute of Mental Health, NIH
Bethesda, Maryland
Children’s Safety Network Webinar
July 30, 2019
Suicide Prevention in the Medical Setting:
Turning Research into Clinical Practice
The views expressed in this presentation do not necessarily represent the views of the NIH, DHHS,
or any other government agency or official. I have no financial conflicts to disclose.
• Universal suicide risk screening for all patients in medical
settings:
• Clinicians require population-specific and site-specific validated
screening instruments
• Clinical Pathway- 3-tiered system
– Brief Screen (20 seconds)
– Brief Suicide Safety Assessment (~10 minutes)
– Full Psychiatric/Safety Evaluation (30 minutes)
• Discharge all patients with safety plan, resources (National Suicide
Lifeline and Crisis Text Line), and means restriction education
Take Home Messages
Ask directly
Robin Williams
1951 – 2014
Kate Spade
1962 – 2018
Anthony Bourdain
1956 – 2018 Kelly Catlin
1995 – 2019
Sydney Aiello
1999 – 2019
Calvin Desir
2002 – 2019
129 every day in the US,
including 25 youth (10-24y)
CDC, 2017
• Suicidality - Any thoughts or actions related to volitionally ending one’s own life
– The whole continuum
• Manifestations along the continuum are linked
– e.g., passive thoughts about wanting to be dead; suicide attempts with intent to die
• Significant marker of emotional distress
Tishler, 2007; Posner, 2007
Defining terms
Completed Suicide Worldwide
• 800,000+ deaths from suicide annually,
worldwide
• 2nd leading cause of death for young
people
• In 2008, global toll from suicide
exceeded the number of estimated deaths
by homicide (535,000) and war
(182,000) combined
WHO, 2014; CDC WISQARS, 2016; Varnik, 2012
0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000
Suicide
Cancer
Cardiovascular disease
Congenital abnormalities
Diabetes
Respiratory Disease
Influenza/pneumonia
Stroke
• 2nd leading cause of death for youth aged 10-24y
• 26,799 deaths in 2017 - 6,769 (25%) deaths by suicide
CDC WISQARS, 2017; Slide courtesy of Jeff Bridge, PhD
1,811
6,769
1,017
546
274
241
263
211
More deaths from suicide
than deaths from 7 other
leading causes combined
Youth Suicide in the U.S.
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
Cru
de
Rate
per
10
0,0
00
Suicide Deaths among U.S. Youth Ages 10-24y
Youth Suicide by State
• 2017 crude rates (per 100,000), 10-24y
• Highest rates
– Alaska: 31.1 deaths
– Montana: 23.5 deaths
• Lowest rates
– New Jersey: 6.3 deaths
– New York: 8.5 deaths
CDC WISQARS, 2017
Youth Suicidal Behavior
• ~ 2 million adolescents attempt suicide annually
– 7.4% of high school students in the US attempted suicide one or more
times in the past year (Range: 5.4 – 16.8)
• 3% made an attempt resulting in medical treatment (1.9 – 7.6)
CDC 2016; Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance, 2017
Youth Suicidal Ideation
• Youth
– 17.3% of high school students reported “seriously considered
attempting suicide” in the last year• Range: 11.9 – 22.31
– 13.6% of high school students made a suicide plan in the past year• Range: 9.7 – 17.1
SAMHSA 2016; Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance, 2017
Younger Children and Suicidality• Children under 12 yrs plan, attempt and die by suicide
– 2nd leading cause of death for 10-14-year-olds
– 10th leading cause of death for children ages 5-11 years
• Suicide Risk in the Emergency Department
– 29.1% of preteens (10-12) screened positive for suicide risk, 17% of which
reported a past suicide attempt (Lanzillo et al., 2019)
– 43.1 % of SA/SI visits to an ED were for children 5-11 years old (Burstein et
al., 2019)
• Bridge et al., 2015:
– 1993-2012: suicide rate stable for children <12
– Significant racial disparity
↑ rate for black children
↓ rate for white children
– 29% disclosed suicidal thoughts to an adult (Sheftall et al. 2016)CDC WISQARS, 2017
Characteristics of
Suicide Attempters and Ideators
• 69% of attempters ages 13-34 did not tell anyone about attempt
– The majority of attempts are unknown to parents
• 48% of adolescent attempters report 19 or less minutes between deciding to kill
themselves and attempting
Simon 2001; Negron et al. 1997
High Risk Factors• Previous attempt
• Mental illness
• Symptoms of depression, anxiety, agitation, impulsivity
• Exposure to suicide of a relative, friend or peer
• Physical/sexual abuse history
• Drug or alcohol abuse
• Lack of mental health treatment
• Suicide ideation
• Over age 60 and male
• Between the ages of 15 and 24
• LGBTQ
• Neurodevelopmental disorders
• Isolation
• Hopelessness
• Medical illness
http://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/App_Files/Media/PDF/NSPL_WalletCard.pdf
Can we save lives by screening for suicide risk
in the medical setting?
The Joint Commission, 2010, 2011, 2016
Underdetection• Majority of those who die by suicide have contact with a medical
professional within 3 months of killing themselves
– ~80% of adolescents visited healthcare provider within the year prior to
death by suicide
– 49% of youth had been to an ED within 1 year
– 38% of adolescents had contact with a health care system within 4 weeks
prior
– Frequently present with somatic complaints
Ahmedani, 2014; Rhodes, 2013; Blum, 1996
What are valid questions that
nurses/physicians can use to screen
pediatric medical patients for suicide
risk in the medical setting?
Screening vs. Assessment:
What’s the difference?
• Suicide Risk Screening
– Identify individuals at risk for suicide
– Oral, paper/pencil, computer
• Suicide Risk Assessment
– Comprehensive evaluation
– Confirms risk
– Estimates imminent risk of danger to patient
– Guides next steps
• 3 pediatric EDs
– Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA
– Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, D.C.
– Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, OH
• September 2008 to January 2011
• 524 pediatric ED patients
– 344 medical/surgical, 180 psychiatric
– 57% female, 50% white, 53% privately insured
– 10 to 21 years (mean=15.2 years; SD = 2.6y)
Ask Suicide-Screening Questions (ASQ)
Horowitz et al. (2012) Arch Pediatr Adolsc Med
Sensitivity: 96.9% (95% CI, 91.3-99.4)
Specificity: 87.6% (95% CI, 84.0-90.5)
Negative predictive values:
-Medical/surgical patients: 99.7%
(95% CI, 98.2-99.9)
-Psychiatric patients: 96.9% (95%
CI, 89.3-99.6)
Horowitz, Bridge, Teach, Ballard…Pao, et al. (2012) Arch Pediatr Adolsc Med
• 98/524 (18.7%) screened positive for suicide risk
– 14/344 (4%) medical/surgical chief complaints
– 84/180 (47%) psychiatric chief complaints
• Feasible
– Less than 1 minute to administer
– Non-disruptive to workflow
• Acceptable
– Parents/guardians gave permission for screening
– Over 95% of patients were in favor of screening
• ASQ is now available in the public domain
Results
• Inpatient medical/surgical unit
• Outpatient primary care/specialty clinics
• Schools
• Child abuse clinics
• Detention Facilities
• Indian Health Service (IHS)
• ASD/NDD/ID Population
Foreign languages– Spanish Hebrew
– Italian Vietnamese
– French Mandarin
– Portuguese Korean
– Dutch Japanese
– Arabic Russian
– Somali Tagalog
– Hindi Urdu
Validation and Implementations in Other Settings:
Ongoing Research
ASQ Toolkit: www.nimh.nih.gov/ASQ
Can depression screening be used to
effectively screen for suicide risk?
Patient Health Questionnaire for
Adolescents (PHQ-A)• 9-item depression screen assessing symptoms during the past 2 weeks
• Available in the public domain
• Commonly used in medical settings
• One suicide-risk question, Item #9:“Thoughts that you would be better off dead or of
hurting yourself in some way”
Dueweke, 2018; Simon, 2016; Viguera 2015
PHQ-9 vs. ASQ
Depression Screening vs.
Suicide Risk Screening
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3689
Suicide-risk positive
(15%)
PHQ-A positive
(23%; score ≥ 10)
Item #9 endorsed
(9%)
• SIQ ≥ 41
• SIQ-JR ≥ 31
• “Yes” to any ASQ itemTotal
N=400
Lanzillo et al., 2017, Poster presented at The American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 64th Annual Meeting
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Suicide-risk positive
(N=58)
PHQ positive
(N=75)Item #9 endorsed
36
22
39
N=400
Lanzillo et al., 2017, Poster presented at The American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 64th Annual Meeting
16
2
Suicide-risk positive
(N=58)
PHQ positive
(N=75)
Item #9 endorsed
(N=37)
626
3
10
36
Lanzillo et al., 2017, Poster presented at The American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 64th Annual Meeting
N=400
16
2
Suicide-risk positive
(N=58)
PHQ positive
(N=75)
Item #9 endorsed
(N=37)
626
3
10
36
16
28%
Lanzillo et al., 2017, Poster presented at The American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 64th Annual Meeting
N=400
Primary Care Providers Role & Barriers
• De-facto principal mental healthcare provider
– Over 70% of youth have contact with a primary care pediatrician once per year
• Barriers for detecting risk in medical settings:– Time & resources
– Difficulty of interpretation of suicidal ideation or behavior
– Stigma
– Asking ineffectively
– Discomfort
Williams et al., 2009
Screening in pediatric outpatient primary
care & specialty clinics
Shayla Sullivant, MD, Site PI
Andrea Bradley-Ewing, MA, MPA
David Williams, MPH
Sabra Boyd MSW, LCSW, LSCSW
Sharee Smallwood, MSW
Kristen Williams, BSN, CPN, CCRC,
Kathy Goggin, PhD, BSN, CPN, CCRC
Elizabeth Wharff, PhD
Laika Aguinaldo, PhD, LICSW
Turning research into practice
“How can we
implement suicide
screening in our
pediatric practice?”
-Dr. A
Common concern:
Can asking kids questions about suicidal
thoughts put ‘ideas’ into their heads?
suicide
Gould et al., 2005; Crawford et al., 2011; Mathias et al., 2012
Iatrogenic Risk?
DeCou & Schumann, 2017; Mathias et al., 2012; Crawford et al., 2011; Gould et al., 2005
2017
2012
2011
Alert the parents
Script for Nurses - Youth
What happens when a
patient screens positive?
What is Considered a Positive Screen?
• Two ways to screen positive:
• Non-Acute: answers “yes” to any of questions #1-4 or refuses to answer
• Provider conducts a brief suicide safety assessment (BSSA) to determine if more extensive
psychiatric evaluation is necessary
• Patient may not leave until BSSA is completed
• Acute: answers “yes” to #5: “Are you having thoughts of killing yourself right
now?”
• Very rare for non-behavioral health patients
• Patient should not be left alone
• Place on safety precautions
Brief Suicide Safety AssessmentC-SSRSASQ BSSA
What is the purpose of the BSSA?
• To help clinician make “next step” decision
• 4 Disposition Choices on ASQ BSSA
• Imminent Risk
• Emergency psychiatric evaluation: Patient is at imminent risk for suicide (current suicidal
thoughts “right now”). Initiate suicide safety precautions and request emergency mental
health evaluation
• High Risk
• Further evaluation of risk is necessary
• Patient will require a further mental health evaluation from a mental health clinician before
discharge
• Low Risk
• Not the “business of the day”
• Patient might benefit from non-urgent mental health follow-up: Review the safety plan
and send home with a mental health referral.
OR
• No further intervention is necessary at this time.
Brahmbhatt, Kurtz, Afzal…Horowitz, et al. (2018) Psychosomatics
Brief Suicide Safety Assessments• BSSA and Worksheets available for Youth and Adults
• Emergency Departments
• Inpatient Medical/Surgical Unit setting
• Outpatient settings
Resources for Patients at Risk
• Parkland Health and Hospital Systems
– Implemented house-wide (ED, inpatient medical/surgical, outpatient);
screened over 2 million patients
– 2 years of data collected by Dr. Kim Roaten
Implementation Example
*Preliminary unpublished data, please do not disseminate
• Involve physician and nursing leadership from the start
• Requires clinician champions
• Train the nurses/medical assistants
– Screening must be systematic
– Ask the questions verbatim
– Politely tell the parents to leave the room for 2 minutes
– Make the screener forced questions in the EHR if possible
• Train the social workers, MDs, NPs, PAs or any other staff conducting the BSSA
• Positive screen rates are manageable
• Majority of parents/guardians ok with leaving the room
• Non-disruptive to workflow
• 1 extra patient to refer to mental health resources per week
Lessons Learned
Summary
• Medical setting is important venue to identify individuals at risk for suicide
• Clinicians require population-specific and site-specific validated screening
instruments
• Screening can take 20 seconds
• Requires practice guidelines for managing positive screens
– Clinical Pathway- 3-tiered system
• Brief screen (20 seconds)
• BSSA (~10 minutes)
• Full mental health/safety evaluation (30 minutes)
• Safety planning and safe storage/means restriction for all patients
A patient example
• 18 y.o. male presenting with
fatigue
• Nurse intuition – something not
right
• Administered ASQ
Thank You
Children’s National Medical
Center
Martine Solages, MD
Paramjit Joshi, MD
Parkland Memorial Hospital
Kim Roaten, PhD
Celeste Johnson, DNP, APRN, PMH
CNS
Carol North, MD, MPE
PaCC Working Group
Khyati Brahmbhatt, MD
Brian Kurtz, MD
Khaled Afzal, MD
Lisa Giles, MD
Kyle Johnson, MD
Elizabeth Kowal, MD
Children’s Mercy
Kansas City
Shayla Sullivant, MD
National Institute of Mental Health
Maryland Pao, MD
Deborah Snyder, MSW
Elizabeth Ballard, PhD
Michael Schoenbaum, PhD
Jane Pearson, PhD
Susanna Sung, LCSW
Kalene Dehaut, LCSW
Eliza Lanzillo, BA
Mary Tipton, BA
Nationwide Children’s Hospital
Jeffrey Bridge, PhD
John Campo, MD
Arielle Sheftall, PhD
Elizabeth Cannon, MA
Boston Children’s Hospital
Elizabeth Wharff, PhD
Fran Damian, MS, RN, NEA-BC
Laika Aguinaldo, PhD
Pediatric & Adolescent Health Partners
Ted Abernathy, MD
Catholic University
Dave Jobes, PhD
Beacon Tree Foundation
Anne Moss Rogers
Thank you to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
for supporting our ASQ Inpatient Study at CNMC
A special thank you to nursing staff, who are instrumental in suicide risk
screening.
We would like to thank the patients and their families for their time and
insight.
Study teams and staff at:
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Suicide Prevention
Programs in the
School Setting:
Lessons Learned
from Signs of
Suicide (SOS)
Jeff Bridge, Ph.D.Director, Center for Suicide Prevention and Research
The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital
Professor of Pediatrics, Psychiatry & Behavioral Health
OSU College of Medicine
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Disclosures
• I receive funding from the National Institute of Mental
Health (NIMH) and the Patient-Centered Outcomes
Research Institute (PCORI)
• Scientific Advisory Board of Clarigent Health
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
• Highlight the school setting as a site for
youth suicide prevention
• Discuss the Signs of Suicide Program as
implemented in central Ohio
Objectives
State-Level Mortality Rates for MVT Injury and
Suicide in U.S. Youth Aged 10-24 Years
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1999-2001 2013-2015
Dea
th R
ate
per
10
0,0
00
Per
son
s
Motor Vehicle Traffic Injury
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1999-2001 2013-2015
Dea
th R
ate
per
10
0,0
00
Per
son
s
Suicide
*Each line represents one state. Between 1999-2001 and 2013-2015, motor vehicle traffic
injury death rates decreased significantly in 49 states (all Ps <.05) and were unchanged in 1
state. Suicide rates increased significantly in 27 states and were unchanged in 23 states.
Reduction in Youth MVT Deaths: Contributing
Factors
• General contributors
– Speed limits, Drinking/Texting & Driving Laws
• Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL)
– 3 Stages
• Learners Permit
• Intermediate (“Provisional”) License
– Limits on nighttime driving, driving with teen passengers
• Unrestricted
• All 50 states and D.C. have implemented
all or some of the GDL components
The American Foundation
for Suicide Prevention
Launches Project 2025
Source: http://afsp.org/american-foundation-suicide-prevention-launches-project-2025/;
http://actionallianceforsuicideprevention.org/about-us
The National Action Alliance
for Suicide Prevention
Adopts the Same Timeline
Identifying 2,500 Youth Suicide
Decedents in the United States
Juvenile
Justice
Involvement
~125
Data source: Action Alliance Research Prioritization Report, page 80, 2014; data sources for estimates provided on page 81
Firearm Deaths
(43% of all
suicide deaths)
1,075
Receiving
Mental Health/
BH Treatment
~625
Seen in ED for
suicide attempt
in past year
~375
Accessed
Healthcare within
30 days of death
~1,500School
Attendance in
Past Year
~2000
Identifying 2,500 Youth Suicide
Decedents in the United States
Juvenile
Justice
Involvement
~125
Data source: Action Alliance Research Prioritization Report, page 80, 2014; data sources for estimates provided on page 81
Firearm Deaths
(43% of all
suicide deaths)
1,075
Receiving
Mental Health/
BH Treatment
~625
Seen in ED for
suicide attempt
in past year
~375
Accessed
Healthcare within
30 days of death
~1,500School
Attendance in
Past Year
~2000
Opportunities to Reduce Suicide and Suicide
Attempts in Young People and Adults
Action Alliance, 2014
Step 1: Identify Large Subgroups at Elevated
Risk in “Boundaried” Systems: High Schools
16.3 million youths will attend grades 9-12
(15.1 million public, 1.2 private) in 2017
4.8 million with symptoms
of depression
2.8 million with
suicidal thoughts
Data source: WISQARS Non-fatal Injury Report , 2014, http://webappa.cdc.gov/sasweb/ncipc/nfirates2001.html
1.3 million will
make a suicide attempt
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Why Suicide Prevention in Schools?
• Universal prevention
• Almost all children go to school
• All students benefit and play a role
• Depression/suicidal thinking impacts academics
• Staff can identify what “typical behavior”
• Can use that to identify major changes
• Trusted adults make talking about depression or
suicide less scary
• Modify culture and enhance “connectedness”
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Suicide Prevention Programs should:
• Decrease student risk by increasing knowledge
about depression and suicide warning signs
• Reduce stigma: mental illness, like physical
illness, requires timely treatment
• Encourage help-seeking for oneself or to obtain
support for a friend
• Engage parents and school staff as partners in
prevention through education
School Concerns about Adopting Suicide Prevention
Concern
Talking about suicideincreases risk
I am here to teach
It takes too much time
We don’t have those problems
We don’t have MH services available
But…
Suicide prevention actually decreases risk
Depression impacts learning and memory
Weeks of learning time can be lost post-suicide
No school or family is immune
Suicide not going away
Creative problem-solving
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Signs of Suicide (SOS)
• Train all adults to identify depression symptoms
and warning signs for suicide
• Teach action steps to students and adults when
encountering suicidal behavior
• Increase student awareness and help-seeking
Acronym (ACT)
•Acknowledge
•Care - show that you care
•Tell a trusted adult
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Warning Signs
• Most people who attempt suicide give warning signs of suicide
• Wanting to be alone all of the time
• ↓ interest in usual activities
• Giving away important belongings
• Risky or reckless behavior
• Self-injury
• Increase in energy following a period
of depression
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………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Warning signs
• Seek immediate help when a student:
• Threatens to attempt suicide or
injures him or herself intentionally
• Obtains a weapon or seeks the
means to kill him or herself
• Talks or writes about wanting to
end his or her life in school or
social media
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………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Triggering Events
•No single event causes suicidal thought or attempts
Examples:
• breakup
• bullying
• school problems or perceived failure
• sudden death of a loved one
• suicide of a friend or relative
• family stressors like divorce, jail, instability
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Evaluation of the SOS Program
• Only universal school-based suicide prevention program for which a reduction in self-reported suicide attempts has been documented
• In 3 separate randomized controlled studies, SOS Program has shown a reduction in self-reported suicide attempts by 40%-64%.
• A recent replication study published in the Prevention Science Journal (2016) found SOS to be associated with:
▫ greater knowledge and more adaptive attitudes about depression and suicide
▫ 64% fewer suicide attempts among intervention youths relative to untreated controls
▫ decrease in suicide planning for “high risk participants” (those who
reported a lifetime history of suicide attempt) (Schilling et al., 2016)
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
SOS Program Components
Universal education:• video & guided discussion
Screening: depression & warning signs of suicide
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
SOS implementation / evaluation timeline
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Triage Assessment
• 5-7 minute assessment by school staff• Need for triage indicated by BSAD Screener or
Student Response Card
• Questions probe:• Concern for a friend
• Current or past suicidal thoughts
• Past suicide attempt
• Current counselor for presenting issues
• Level of distress
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Risk Assessment
If triage assessment reveals current or recent suicidal
ideation and/or attempt in past year:
• Administer a validated suicide risk assessment tool • Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS)
• Safety Plan• Whether a student can readily complete this provides valuable
assessment information and reduces risk
• Determine disposition• Outpatient counseling
• Outpatient crisis or emergency department
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Advantages of SOS
• Implemented by school staff
• Engages existing supports including school staff,
parents, peers, community
• Incorporates many best practice elements
• Increases dialogue around mental health
• Reduces stigma
• Sustainable
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Center for Suicide Prevention and
Research (CSPR)
• Joint prevention and research focus combining
efforts of NCH Behavioral Health and the
Research Institute
• Implementation of SOS Signs of Suicide
prevention program in central/southeastern Ohio
schools at no cost:
o Train youth, caregivers, and school staff to increase depression and suicide awareness
o Teach adults and youth how to identify, support, and respond to individuals at risk for suicide
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Expansion of Hospital-School
Partnerships
•CSPR version of SOS disseminated across Ohio
– Over 3000 school staff trained across 10 counties
– School-based therapists, nurses, athletic trainers
– Over 200 Columbus City School Counselors & SWs
– Dozens of community partners who serve youth
•Training elements and clinical support processes
– Increase clarity of SOS
– "Sustainable fidelity”
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
NCH SOS Gatekeeper Training
Outcomes
• SOS Gatekeeper staff training pre/post
survey assesses changes in:
• Staff knowledge about suicide
• Staff awareness of school resources
• Staff confidence in addressing student needs
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
NCH Signs of Suicide Implementation
•34,005 students, 1571 classrooms, 122
schools
6,515 Yes Response
Cards
3,847 Depression-
Suicide Screens
8,612 Triage Assessments
1,145 Risk Assessments
198 Crisis
Referrals
(Nov. 2015 through March 2019)
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Lessons Learned
• Staff buy-in is imperative assess needs first• Strong administrator support enables success
• Talking about suicide can be anxiety provoking• Increase staff training & exposure to material
• Don’t rush implementation• Make sure all roles and expectations established
• Start suicide prevention by middle school
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
• Creative problem-solving• Student follow-up is not limited to counselors• Engage local MH agencies, county boards,
community & faith-based partners, and hospitals
• Never underestimate the power of caring &
passionate school staff• Stars rise at every implementation at every school
• Consider the big picture• Sustainability conversations from the beginning
Working with Limited Resources
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Impact of SOS Program on schools
“SOS helped us uncover issues with kids that we
never suspected were considering suicide.
Students came forward concerned about friends;
others felt free to share their feelings and ask for
help. Some parents had no idea their kids were
entertaining dangerous thoughts and thanked us
for having SOS. All in all, it was the most
important activity we did all year.” - Middle School Guidance Counselor
CSPR Research Team
• Kendra Heck, MPH
• Arielle Sheftall, PhD
• Sandy McBee-Strayer, PhD
• Jacki Tissue, LPCC
• Donna Ruch, PhD
• Paige Schlagbaum
• Monae James
• Emory Bergdoll
• Connor Bauer
CSPR Suicide Prevention Team
• John Ackerman, PhD
• Elizabeth Cannon, LPCC
• Laurel Biever, MEd, LPC
• Melanie Fluellen, LPCC
• Amberle Prater, LISW
• Elena Camacho, LISW
Thank you!
Partners
• NCH School-based Team
• Columbus City Schools
• Syntero
• Screening for Mental Health
………………..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Questions?
The Center for Suicide Prevention and
Research
http://www.nationwidechildrens.org/suicide-prevention
Phone: 614-355-0850
Email: [email protected]
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